Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus is an autoimmune disease involoving both environmental and genetic factors. Genetic analyses in humans and rodents have shown that the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a major generic factor and that several other genes may be involved in the development of the disease. We performed genetic analysis of type 1 diabetes in a newly established animal model, the Komeda diabetes-prone (KDP) rat, and found that most of the genetic predisposition to diabetes is accounted for by two major susceptibility genes, MHC and Iddm/kdp 1. In addition, we identified a nonsense mutation in the Casitas B-lineage lymphoma b (Cblb) gene by positional cloning of Iddm/kdp1. In this paper, I review our positional cloning analysis of Iddm/kdp 1 and propose a two-gene model of the development of type 1 diabetes in which tow major susceptibility genes, Cblb and MHC, determine autoimmune reaction and tissue specificity to pancreatic β-cells, respectively. Copyright © 2005 Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science.
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Yokoi, N. (2005). Identification of a major gene responsible for type 1 diabetes in the Komeda diabetes-prone rat. Experimental Animals. https://doi.org/10.1538/expanim.54.111
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